توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The EU Anti-Corruption Report: A Reflexive Governance Approach
نام کتاب : The EU Anti-Corruption Report: A Reflexive Governance Approach
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : گزارش ضد فساد اتحادیه اروپا: رویکرد حاکمیت بازتابی
سری : Law, Crime and Culture
نویسندگان : Andi Hoxhaj
ناشر : Routledge
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 285
ISBN (شابک) : 1138555843 , 9781138555846
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 8 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Introduction
SECTION 1
1. An introduction: A short history of anti-corruption policy in the EU
1.1 The first phase
1.2 The
second phase
1.3 The third phase
1.4 The fourth phase
1.5 Conclusion
2. The EU anti-corruption report
2.1 Overview of general objectives and findings of the EU anti-corruption report
2.2 Perceptions of corruption and experience of corruption in the EU
2.2.1 Private citizen responses
2.2.2 Commercial responses
2.3 Public procurement
2.4 The EU anti-corruption report recommendations for each of the member states
2.4.1 Austria
2.4.2 Belgium
2.4.3 Bulgaria
2.4.4 Croatia
2.4.5 Cyprus
2.4.6 Czech Republic
2.4.7 Denmark
2.4.8 Estonia
2.4.9 Finland
2.4.10 France
2.4.11 Germany
2.4.12 Greece
2.4.13 Hungary
2.4.14 Ireland
2.4.15 Italy
2.4.16 Latvia
2.4.17 Lithuania
2.4.18 Luxembourg
2.4.19 Malta
2.4.20 The Netherlands
2.4.21 Poland
2.4.22 Portugal
2.4.23 Romania
2.4.24 Slovakia
2.4.25 Slovenia
2.4.26 Spain
2.4.27 Sweden
2.4.28 United Kingdom
2.5 General limitations of the EU anti-corruption report
2.6 Conclusion
3. The EU anti-corruption report and reflexive governance
3.1 Introduction
3.2 New governance in the European Union
3.3 The open method of coordination
3.4 Reflexive governance
3.5 Reflexive law
3.6 An analysis of the EU anti-corruption report as reflexive governance
3.7 Conclusion
SECTION 2 Country Case Studies
4. The United Kingdom
4.1 The EU anti-corruption report for the UK
4.1.1 The UK attitude to ethics
4.2 Foreign bribery in the UK
4.2.1 Risk-based principles for preventing bribery
4.2.2 Bribery of foreign public officials
4.2.3 Improving the accountability in the governance of banks
4.2.4 A review of the failures of the financial system
4.3 Political corruption in the UK
4.3.1 Implementing a donation cap in the UK
4.3.2 Integrity in elected officials
4.3.3 Corruption concerns in the defence sector
4.4 UK responses to the EU anti-corruption report
4.5 Post-Brexit: the UK anti-corruption initiatives
5. Romania
5.1 The EU anti-corruption report for Romania
5.1.1 The judicial system
5.1.2 The political system
5.1.3 Healthcare
5.1.4 Public procurement
5.2 The EU anti-corruption strategy towards Romania—the CVM
5.2.1 The Cooperation and Verification Mechanism for Romania
5.2.2 Recommendations for Romania’s judicial system
5.2.3 Recommendations for the political system
5.2.4 Recommendations for public procurement
5.2.5 The threat of corruption in healthcare
5.3 Post-EU anti-corruption report
6. Albania
6.1 The EU anti-corruption report for Albania
6.2 Post-communist Albania and anti-corruption
6.2.1 1990–1997: corruption as a new political chess game
6.2.2 The collapse of the pyramid schemes and the international support to
corruption in Albania, 1997–2009
6.2.3 The EU conditionality and Albania’s obstacles in developing an anti-corruption policy
6.3 Albanian relations with the European Union
6.3.1 The chronological path to accession
6.3.2 Candidate status delay—corruption and organised crime factors
6.4 Reforming the public administration
6.5 Reforming the judiciary
6.6 The future for Albania and the anti-corruption policy
6.6.1 Concluding remarks on the country studies
SECTION 3
7. The future of EU anti-corruption policy
7.1 Introduction
7.2 The impact of the EU anti-corruption report
7.3 The EU anti-corruption policy—the end of the report in 2017
7.4 The European semester process
7.4.1 European Semester 2018 anti-corruption recommendations
7.4.2 Country-specific recommendation summary
7.5 EU anti-corruption policy under the European semester process
7.5.1 European semester process: narrow scope and opaque reasoning
7.5.2 Failures to promote good governance and the rule of law
7.5.3 No room for a broader dialogue: civil society exclusion
7.6 Improving the European semester process in analysing corruption
7.6.1 Implementation
7.6.2 Risk assessment analysis
7.7 The future for the European semester process and EU anti-corruption policy
7.7.1 Including organised crime in EU anti-corruption policy objectives
7.7.2 Including the protection of whistle-blowers to EU anti-corruption policy objectives
7.7.3 Empowering specialised anti-corruption institutions at the member state level
7.8 Conclusion
Conclusion
Appendix A—European semester country-specific recommendations
in 2018
Bibliography
Index